Previously unknown settlement in Small Hythe was once an important infrastructure link
A “very rare” clay figurine of the god Mercury, one of fewer than 10 ever found in Britain, has been discovered at a previously unknown Roman settlement that once sat next to a busy port – but is now 10 miles from the sea.
The site of the settlement, in the modern hamlet of Small Hythe (or Smallhythe), near Tenterden in Kent, now sits among fields, but was once an important link in the Roman empire’s import and infrastructure network in southern England and the Channel.
More Stories
Researchers create AI-based tool that restores age-damaged artworks in hours
Australia has ‘no alternative’ but to embrace AI and seek to be a world leader in the field, industry and science minister says
The Guide #195: How Reddit made nerds of us all